TYLER SILVY
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT
September 23, 2019, 6:37AM
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An influx of Bay Area visitors to Sonoma County’s bucolic riverlands has spiked in recent years, bringing with it a problem typically reserved for the privacy of one’s own home.
People are pooping in public. And they’re doing so in such great numbers that the Sonoma County Department of Transportation and Public Works will in the coming year debut new, anti-pooping signage in key spots like Steelhead Beach, Geysers Road and more.
“There’s no excuse for this,” Public Works Director Johannes Hoevertsz said. “The sign we have says, ‘no public pooping.’ We really need to drive the message that if you’re going to come to Sonoma County and be a guest, you can’t do this.”
County officials say the biggest culprits are drunk partiers who are too lazy to take a long walk at Steelhead Beach on the Russian River back to the facilities. Some have even relieved themselves in nearby neighbors’ yards.
Hoevertsz said he doesn’t think the homeless population is to blame because it tends to be a bigger problem after popular weekends at Petrified Forest Road, Porter Creek Road and Geysers Road.
“You see it with day use and overnight camping spots,” said Chris Brokate, Sonoma County Clean River Alliance founder. “It’s pretty bad. I don’t know if it’s as bad in the lower river as it is up north, from what I see.”
However, Brokate and Larry Laba, who owns rafting company Russian River Adventures, see the problem as mainly centering on the transient population that lives along the river.
Don McEnhill, executive director of RussianRiverkeeper, agreed, but he said the amount of dog poop and cow manure in and around the river dwarfs anything seen from humans.
“It’s always a matter of scale,” McEnhill said. “You’re talking about orders of magnitude of fecal matter beyond wild animals.”
When it comes to human waste, the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office has seen calls involving the homeless population, cyclists and party bus folks. It’s true that the areas are somewhat remote, but Sheriff’s Office Community Engagement Liaison Misti Wood, who has spoken with neighbors who have dealt with the remnants of people’s poor choices, said she doesn’t understand it.
“There is a restroom at Steelhead. It’s fully functioning,” Wood said. “I don’t know what would motivate somebody to publicly defecate across the street with a bathroom available. What our deputies have seen is that when people become overly intoxicated the first thing to go is judgment.”
The act violates a Sonoma County code that prohibits public urination an defecation. Children 9 years old or younger get a pass.
In cases near the river, the act also flouts a Fish and Game code that prohibits placing waste, among other things, within 150 feet of the high water mark of state waters, which include the Russian River.
Hoevertsz’s department is responsible for whatever filth is left within the public road right of way. Depending on the road, that can extend well beyond the physical roadway. Public Works has standing contracts with a couple of companies for cleaning up the waste. It’s considered hazardous waste and is treated with caution.
With costs reaching up to $60,000 for cleanup, Hoevertsz said he has worked with county Supervisors Lynda Hopkins and Susan Gorin to look at installing signs. The favored version features a person squatting over a stylized, swirly pile of poop — the whole scene crossed out with a red circle and line. Beneath it, the words “no public pooping.”